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EN207.14 Punishment: Difference between revisions

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=={{Title other languages}}==
=={{Title other languages}}==
<span><div class="emoji flag de"></div> '''[[DE207.14 Strafe]]''' <div class="emoji flag es"></div> '''[[ES207.14 Dolor de barriga]]''' <div class="emoji flag nl"></div> '''[[NL207.14 Buikpijn]]''' <div class="emoji flag no"></div> '''[[NO207.14 Straff]]'''</span>
<span>
:<div class="emoji flag de"></div> '''[[DE207.14 Strafe]]'''
:<div class="emoji flag es"></div> '''[[ES207.14 Dolor de barriga]]'''
:<div class="emoji flag fs"></div> '''[[FS207.14 BUKPIN|FS207.14 <span class="fryas">BUKPIN</span>]]'''
:<div class="emoji flag nl"></div> '''[[NL207.14 Buikpijn]]'''
:<div class="emoji flag no"></div> '''[[NO207.14 Straff]]'''</span>


=={{Other EN}}==
=={{Other EN}}==

Revision as of 10:42, 3 November 2024

Ott 2025

Z. Era of Askar

How Punishment Came

207.14 See here how punishment came:

Once, they together conquered a whole fleet from out of the Middle Sea. The ships were loaded with purple cloth and other valuables that all came from Phoenicia. The weak members of the crews were put ashore south of the Seine, but the strong were held to serve as slaves. The best looking were made to serve ashore, while the unsightliest and swarthiest were kept on board to row on the benches. At the Flee, the booty was meted out — but, so too, unbeknownst to them, was their punishment. Of the men stationed on the foreign ships, six died of pain in the belly. It was believed that the food and drink were tainted, so all of it was [208] dumped overboard. But the belly pain continued to strike. And anywhere slaves or goods arrived, so too did the belly pain.[1] The Saxmen brought it over their marks; with the Jutters it sailed to Skeanland and along the shores of the Baltic Sea; with Askar’s navigators it was spread to Britannia.

We, and those from Greanega, accepted neither goods nor people into our territory, and so we remained free from the belly pain. How many people died of belly pain I cannot tell; but Prontlik, who heard it later from the other mothers, informed me that Askar had lost a thousandfold more free people from his states than the number of foul slaves he had brought in.

Notes

  1. Accepting that our AD timeline may not be correct, this could refer to the Justinianic plague (541–549 CE).

Continue Reading

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In other languages

DE207.14 Strafe
ES207.14 Dolor de barriga
FS207.14 BUKPIN
NL207.14 Buikpijn
NO207.14 Straff

Other English translations

Chapter Z: Sandbach 1876